Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Cardinals ask all the faithful to pray for then them through selection of the next Pope

 

Cardinals pray before the Blessed Sacrament in a chapel near the New Synod HallCardinals pray before the Blessed Sacrament in a chapel near the New Synod Hall  (@Vatican Media)

Cardinals ask faithful to pray for their discernment for new Pope

The College of Cardinals has requested that all Catholics pray for them, so that they may listen the Holy Spirit as they discern whom to choose as the next Pope.

By Vatican News

The Holy See released a declaration on Wednesday in which the Cardinals preparing for the upcoming conclave ask the faithful to pray for them.

“The College of Cardinals gathered in Rome, engaged in the General Congregations in preparation for the Conclave, wishes to invite the People of God to live this ecclesial moment as an event of grace and spiritual discernment, listening to the will of God,” read the statement.

The Cardinals said they feel “the need to be supported by the prayers of all the faithful,” since they are aware of their responsibility in choosing the next Successor of Peter.

Prayer, they added, “is the true force that in the Church promotes the unity of all the members of the one Body of Christ.”

“Faced with the enormity of the task ahead and the urgency of the present time,” said the Cardinals, “it is first of all necessary to make ourselves humble instruments of the infinite wisdom and providence of our Heavenly Father, in docility to the action of the Holy Spirit.”

The Cardinals noted that the Holy Spirit is “the protagonist of the life of the People of God, the One to whom we must listen, accepting what He is saying to the Church.”

“May the Blessed Virgin Mary accompany these prayers with her maternal intercession,” concluded the Cardinals’ declaration.

The 5th Novemdiales Mass in memory of Pope Francis presided by Cardinal Leonardo Sandri

 

Cardinal Sandri leads the fifth Novemdiale mass in St Peter's BasilicaCardinal Sandri leads the fifth Novemdiale mass in St Peter's Basilica  (AFP or licensors)

Cardinal Sandri: Pope Francis leaves legacy of service and vision

Presiding over the fifth Novemdiales Mass in memory of Pope Francis, Cardinal Sandri reflects on Pope Francis’ witness of humble service as well as on the lasting vision he leaves for the future of the Church.

By Francesca Merlo

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri opened his homily during the fifth Novendiales Mass by proclaiming "Christ is Risen". He noted that in this Easter time the Church is between two important moments: the end of Pope Francis' papacy and the start of a new one. In just a few days, he said, the Cardinal Protodeacon will once again step out onto the balcony of St Peter’s to announce the name of a new Pope. That role, said Cardinal Sandri, “finds its meaning in the Paschal experience of Christ.”

Remembering together, praying together

Cardinal Sandri explained that the Novendiales Mass is not just a time of mourning, but a moment for the Church to come together, to pray, to remember, and to reaffirm its faith in the Resurrection. The cardinals gather not only as collaborators of the Pope, said Cardinal Sandri, but also carrying with them the prayers of people from all over the world: from Tonga to Mongolia, from Tehran to Jerusalem, and from places where Christians are a small but faithful presence, such as Morocco and Algeria.

“We are called each day to remember and consciously live the truth that to reign is to serve,” the Cardinal said, quoting Pope Francis, before stressing that it is with this spirit that Pope Francis lived his papcy: through his actions, his journeys and his constant care for those on the margins.

The title “Servant of the Servants of God,” once used by Pope Gregory the Great, was important for Pope Francis, who continued to remind the Church that at its heart, it must always serve, said the Cardinal

From Scripture to today

Reflecting on the day’s reading from the Acts of the Apostles, Cardinal Sandri noted that Peter’s speech at Pentecost was chosen not only because it marked the beginning of the Church but also because it speaks of fulfilment. This, too, reiterates that just as Pentecost marked a new beginning for the apostles, the Church today prepares for a new chapter.

He then went on to recite a verse from the prophet Joel, one often quoted by Pope Francis: “I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions.”

Cardinal Sandri noted that Pope Francis often linked this passage to the importance of connecting generations. “There is no future without this encounter between old and young,” he explained.

A dream for the Church

Bringing his homily to a close, Cardinal Sandri noted that Pope Francis had already left a vision for the future of the Church. In the Bull of Indiction for the 2025 Jubilee, he looked ahead to another major anniversary: 2000 years since the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus Christ, to be celebrated in 2033.

“This Holy Year will guide the path of Christians… so that spiritually, we may all become pilgrims to the Holy Land, and proclaim once again: ‘The Lord is truly risen and has appeared to Simon!’", concluded the cardinal

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

Saint of the Day for Wednesday

 

St. Pius V, Pope





Pope from 1566-1572 and one of the foremost leaders of the Catholic Reformation. Born Antonio Ghislieri in Bosco, Italy, to a poor family, he labored as a shepherd until the age of fourteen and then joined the Dominicans, being ordained in 1528. Called Brother Michele, he studied at Bologna and Genoa and then taught theology and philosophy for sixteen years before holding the posts of master of novices and prior for several Dominican houses. Named inquisitor for Como and Bergamo, he was so capable in the fulfillment of his office that by 1551, and at the urging of the powerful Cardinal Carafa, he was named by Pope Julius III commissary general of the Inquisition. In 1555, Carafa was elected Pope Paul IV and was responsible for Ghislieri’s swift rise as a bishop of Nepi and Sutri in 1556, cardinal in 1557, and grand inquisitor in 1558. While out of favor for a time under Pope Pius IV who disliked his reputation for excessive zeal, Ghislieri was unanimously elected a pope in succession to Pius on January 7, 1566. As pope, Pius saw his main objective as the continuation of the massive program of reform for the Church, in particular the full implementation of the decrees of the Council of Trent. He published the Roman Catechism, the revised Roman Breviary, and the Roman Missal; he also declared Thomas Aquinas a Doctor of the Church, commanded a new edition of the works of Thomas Aquinas, and created a commission to revise the Vulgate. The decrees of Trent were published throughout all Catholic lands, including Europe, Asia, Africa, and the New World, and the pontiff insisted on their strict adherence. In 1571, Pius created the Congregation of the Index to give strength to the Church’s resistance to Protestant and heretical writings, and he used the Inquisition to prevent any Protestant ideas from gaining a foot hold in Italy. In dealing with the threat of the Ottoman Turks who were advancing steadily across the Mediterranean, Pius organized a formidable alliance between Venice and Spain, culminating in the Battle of Lepanto, which was a complete and shattering triumph over the Turks. The day of the victory was declared the Feast Day of Our Lady of Victory in recognition of Our Lady’s intercession in answer to the saying of the Rosary all over Catholic Europe. Pius also spurred the reforms of the Church by example. He insisted upon wearing his coarse Dominican robes, even beneath the magnificent vestments worn by the popes, and was wholeheartedly devoted to the religious life. His reign was blemished only by the continuing oppression of the Inquisition; the often-brutal treatment of the Jews of Rome; and the ill-advised decision to excommunicate Queen Elizabeth I of England in February 1570, an act which also declared her deposed and which only worsened the plight of English Catholics. These were overshadowed in the view of later generations by his contributions to the Catholic Reformation. Pope Clement beatified him on May 1, 1672, and Pope Clement XI canonized him on May 22, 1712.

Cardinals busy today, plan pre-conclave Mass

 

Cardinals announce pre-conclave Mass at sixth General Congregation

The College of Cardinals holds their sixth General Congregation on Tuesday morning and announces the times of the votive Mass ahead of the conclave and the procession to enter the Sistine Chapel.

By Vatican News

During the sixth General Congregation held in the New Synod Hall on Tuesday morning, 183 Cardinals were present, including 124 Cardinals electors. Around 20 Cardinals took the floor to speak.

They addressed themes related to the Church and the challenges it faces, offering reflections shaped by the perspectives of their continents and regions of origin, as well as the Church’s possible responses.

The Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni, told reporters that two Cardinal electors will not attend the conclave due to health reasons.

Separately, Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu announced he will obey the will of Pope Francis and not take part in the conclave.

On Monday, the College of Cardinals decided to send a message to the world, expressing gratitude for the participation in recent events and for the support received over the past days, which was released on Tuesday.

The conclave will begin on May 7, following the same schedule as the previous one in 2013.

Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, Dean of the College of Cardinals, will preside at the votive Mass for the Election of the Pope (Pro Eligendo Papa), which will be celebrated at 10:00 AM in St. Peter’s Basilica.

The conclave will officially begin at 4:30 PM with a prayer service in the Pauline Chapel, attended by the Cardinal electors who will pray the Litany of the Saints before entering in procession into the Sistine Chapel.

They will sing the Veni Creator and then make their solemn oath to faithfully fulfill the Munus Petrinum if they are elected Pope and to maintain absolute secrecy regarding the conclave.

Novemdiales Mass for Day 4 with Cardinal Gambetti

 



Cardinal Gambetti at Novemdiales Mass: See the fullness of God in the least

Presiding over the fourth Novemdiales Mass in memory of Pope Francis, Cardinal Gambetti reminds the faithful that they should see God in everyone as the late Pope did.

by Francesca Merlo 

At the fourth Novemdiales Mass celebrated in St Peter’s Basilica, Cardinal Mauro Gambetti reflected on the passage from Matthew's Gospel describing the Final Judgement, when all peoples of the world are gathered before Christ, the Son of Man. 

Some, the Gospel tells us, will enter into the joy of the Kingdom. Others will find themselves alone - outside love, outside God. “Excluded from the Kingdom,” Cardinal Gambetti said, “they remain desperately alone in their soul".

The Gospel speaks of sheep and goats, a familiar image. But Cardinal Gambetti invited the faithful to look deeper. Sheep, he explained, are faithful and gentle, caring for the weakest of the flock. Goats, instead, are more independent and prouder, often concerned only with themselves. “Which of these attitudes do we embody,” he asked, both “personally and institutionally?"

Belonging to the Kingdom, he reminded the faithful, is not about knowing all the answers or performing all the right actions. In the Gospel, those welcomed into the Kingdom ask, “Lord, when did we see you?” The word used - oráo in Greek - means more than simply seeing. It means to truly understand, to recognise. The message is clear: we meet Christ when we meet others, especially the most vulnerable, with compassion.







“The Word became flesh,” the Cardinal continued, quoting theologian Elia Citterio, “so that whoever touches man touches God, whoever honours man honours God, whoever despises man despises God.”

This is the heart of the Gospel. This is the heart of the Church. And it is this humanity that Cardinal Gambetti saw in Pope Francis. He recounted the farewell to the Pope written by Edith Bruck, who described the Pope as “a man who loved, was moved, wept, pleaded for peace... his humanity was contagious, it softened even the stones".

As the Church prays for Pope Francis and walks through these days of mourning, Cardinal Gambetti reminded the faithful that “Christian humanity” must be at the centre of the Church’s mission. “Everyone, everyone, everyone is called to live in the Church", Pope Francis once said - words that today feel more urgent than ever.

In the first reading, Peter’s encounter with Cornelius offers a model: openness, trust, and the courage to proclaim the Gospel through relationship, not fear.

Finally, Cardinal Gambetti noted that on this Feast of Saint Catherine of Siena, whose bold love for Christ saw no boundaries, the Church is reminded of the call to walk closely with humanity - because God has done the same.











Saint of the Day for today (Tuesday)

 

St. Catherine of Siena

Feastday: April 29

Patron: Fire prevention
Birth: 1347
Death: 1380



St. Catherine of Siena was born during the outbreak of the plague in Siena, Italy on March 25, 1347. She was the 25th child born to her mother, although half of her brothers and sisters did not survive childhood. Catherine herself was a twin, but her sister did not survive infancy. Her mother was 40 when she was born. Her father was a cloth dyer.

At the age of 16, Catherine’s sister, Bonaventura, died, leaving her husband as a widower. Catherine’s parents proposed that he marry Catherine as a replacement, but Catherine opposed this. She began fasting and cut her hair short to mar her appearance.

Her parents attempted to resist this move, to avoid marriage, but they were unsuccessful. Her fasting and her devotion to her family, convinced them to relent and allow her to live as she pleased. Catherine once explained that she regarded her father as a representation of Jesus and her mother as Our Lady, and her brothers as the apostles, which helped her to serve them with humility.

Despite Catherine’s religious nature, she did not choose to enter a convent and instead she joined the Third Order of St. Dominic, which allowed her to associate with a religious society while living at home.

Fellow Dominican sisters taught St. Catherine how to read. Meanwhile, she lived quietly, isolated within her family home.

St. Catherine developed a habit of giving things away and she continually gave away her family’s food and clothing to people in need. She never asked permission to give these things away, and she quietly put up with their criticisms.

Something changed her when she was 21. She described an experience she referred to as her “mystical marriage to Christ.” There are debates over whether or not St. Catherine was given a ring with some claiming she was given a bejeweled ring, and other claiming the ring was made of Jesus’s skin. St. Catherine herself started the rumor of the latter in her writings, but she was known to often claim the ring itself was invisible.

Such mystical experiences change people, and St. Catherine was no exception. In her vision, she was told to reenter public life and to help the poor and sick. She immediately rejoined her family and went into public to help people in need.

She often visited hospitals and homes where the poor and sick were found. Her activities quickly attracted followers who helped her in her mission to serve the poor and sick.

St. Catherine was drawn further into the world as she worked, and eventually she began to travel, calling for reform of the Church and for people to confess and to love God totally. She became involved in politics, and was key in working to keep city states loyal to the Pope. She was also credited with helping to start a crusade to the Holy Land. On one occasion, she visited a condemned political prisoner and was credited with saving his soul, which she saw being taken up to heaven at the moment of his death.

St. Catherine allegedly was given the stigmata, but like her ring, it was visible only to herself. She took Bl. Raymond of Capua has her confessor and spiritual director.

From 1375 onwards, St. Catherine began dictating letters to scribes. She petitioned for peace and was instrumental in persuading the Pope in Avignon to return to Rome.

She became involved in the fractured politics of her time, but was instrumental in restoring the Papacy to Rome and in brokering peace deals during a time of factional conflict and war between the Italian city states.

She also established a monastery for women in 1377 outside of Siena. She is credited with composing over 400 letters, her Dialogue, which is her definitive work, and her prayers. These works are so influential that St. Catherine would later be declared a Doctor of the Church. She is one of the most influential and popular saints in the Church.

By 1380, the 33-year-old mystic had become ill, possibly because of her habit of extreme fasting. Her confessor, Raymond, ordered her to eat, but she replied that she found it difficult to do so, and that possibly she was ill.

In January of 1380, her illness accelerated her inability to eat and drink. Within weeks, she was unable to use her legs. She died on April 29, following a stroke just a week prior.

St. Catherine’s feast day is April 29, she is the patroness against fire, illness, the United States, Italy, miscarriages, people ridiculed for their faith, sexual temptation, and nurses.

Monday, April 28, 2025

The 3rd day of Novemdiales; Mass for Pope Francis presided by Cardinal Reina

 

Cardinal Reina at Novemdiales Mass: 'We feel like sheep without a shepherd'

At Mass on the third day of the Novemdiales in suffrage for Pope Francis, the Cardinal Vicar General for the Diocese of Rome reminds the faithful, as they mourn the late Pope, that death is not the end because ‘The grain must die to bear fruit.’

By Vatican News

The third Mass of the Novemdiales, the nine days of mourning for the late Pope Francis, was celebrated in St. Peter’s Basilica on Monday afternoon and presided over by Cardinal Baldassare Reina.

Sheep without a shepherd in a broken world

The Cardinal Vicar General for the Diocese of Rome began his homily by acknowledging the shared grief of the people of Rome who, along with all the faithful across the world, not only mourn the passing of their Bishop, but feel like “sheep without a shepherd.”

This metaphor, he said, summaries the feelings of these days, but also reflects the present state of humanity, which, in a world ablaze with crises, seems abandoned and leaderless, much like the crowds that moved Jesus to compassion.

Life and goodness prevail over death and evil

Cardinal Reina recalled how the Apostles, despite their tireless work and exhaustion, strove to bring signs of hope and tangible love to a broken world — simple gestures like touch, mercy, and non-judgmental words — signs that life and goodness prevail over death and evil. This apostolic spirit, he remarked, echoed in Pope Francis’ Ministry: a dedication that exhausted itself in service, culminating in a final outpouring of blessing on his Easter Sunday.

Sowing in times of famine demands extraordinary faith 

Yet, Cardinal Reina warned that the present is not a time for nostalgia or fear-driven retreat. Rather, the Church is called to radical fidelity — to embrace a new heaven and a new earth, without succumbing to the temptation to cling to past certainties or worldly alliances.  

True fidelity, he said, also means discerning the spirit of the reforms started by Pope Francis and pursuing them with courage, seeking leadership that resists fear and worldly compromise, and remains rooted in Gospel compassion and unity.

Drawing on the Gospel of John, Cardinal Reina reflected on the parable of the grain of wheat that must die to bear fruit — an image of Christ’s death and His salvific Resurrection. In following Christ, Christians, too, he said, must become "seeds," willing to be buried, hidden, and spent for the sake of new life. Sowing in times of famine, as the psalmist describes, demands extraordinary faith — offering up even the last reserves in a seemingly desperate act of trust.

Continuing on the path set by Pope Francis

The Cardinal paralleled Pope Francis’ final public acts with this radical act of sowing unto death. His final “sowing” was a living testament to the mission of Jesus, the Good Shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep.

Cardinal Reina concluded by invoking the Blessed Virgin Mary, the protector of the Roman people, to accompany and guard the Church as she continues on the path set by its late pastor, reminding the faithful that death is not the end, but the seedbed of resurrection.

And Monday's powerful Saint #3

 

St. Peter Chanel




In St. Peter Chanel, Priest and Martyr (Feast day - April 28) The protomartyr of the South Seas, St. Peter Chanel was born in 1803 at Clet in the diocese of Belley, France. His intelligence and simple piety brought him to the attention of the local priest, Father Trompier, who saw to his elementary education. Entering the diocesan Seminary, Peter won the affection and the esteem of both students and professors. After his ordination he found himself in a rundown country parish and completely revitalized it in the three-year span that he remained there. However, his mind was set on missionary work; so, in 1831, he joined the newly formed Society of Mary (Marists) which concentrated on missionary work at home and abroad. To his dismay, he was appointed to teach at the seminary at Belley and remained there for the next five years, diligently performing his duties.

In 1836, the Society was given the New Hebrides in the Pacific as a field for evangelization, and the jubilant St. Peter was appointed Superior of a little band of missionaries sent to proclaim the Faith to its inhabitants. On reaching their destination after an arduous ten-month journey, the band split up and St. Peter went to the Island of Futuna accompanied by a lay brother and an English layman, Thomas Boog. They were at first well received by the pagans and their king Niuliki who had only recently forbidden cannibalism. However, the king's jealousy and fear were aroused when the missionaries learned the language and gained the people's confidence; he realized the adoption of the Christian Faith would lead to the abolition of some of the prerogatives he enjoyed as both high Priest and sovereign.

Finally, when his own son expressed a desire to be baptized, the king's hatred erupted, and he dispatched a group of his warriors to set upon the saintly head of the missionaries. Thus, on April 28, 1841, three years after his arrival, St. Peter was seized and clubbed to death by those he had come to save. And his death brought his work to completion - within five months the entire island was converted to Christianity.